In Tracy Kidder’s book, Among Schoolchildren, I found many issues that are familiar. I also came across many issue that were very unfamiliar. Mrs. Zajac is the teacher for a fifth grade class in the “Flats” of Holyoke, Massachusetts. Many of the problems that arise in her classroom do so because of economic and cultural factors. Three issues I especially noticed was that parents were rarely involved in their children’s school life, children were being taught at different levels and Mrs. Zajac yearned for support from the principal.
In one section of the book on page 48 Mrs. Zajac states, “I’d like to have one year of parents pushing me.” Mrs. Zajac claims that she does not get much advice from the student’s parents. There are a few reasons I can think of why most of the parents have little involvement in their children’s education. Mainly this is a consequence of such factors like parents working long hours and parents thinking that the school is the only institution where a child should learn. I feel that this is making it more difficult on Mrs. Zajac because a good percentage of her students not only need her teaching skills but need their parents help with such things like their homework. Take for instance Robert. Robert is a show off in class and does not do his work. When Mrs. Zajac contacts his mother and sets up a system where they both will sign his homework, the mother does not cooperate well. At first Robert’s mother wrote a note and wanted to know every aspect of his school life but in the long run she did not go full force with making her son do homework. The parents need to be an authority figure at home and need to always know what kind of work the child is doing. I believe that it is the parents responsibility to work with the teacher in shaping the child’s education.